Compensatory sequence variation between trans-species small RNAs and their target sites

Johnson, Nathan R.; dePamphilis, Claude W.; Axtell, Michael J.

Abstract

Trans-species small regulatory RNAs (sRNAs) are delivered to host plants from diverse pathogens and parasites and can target host mRNAs. How trans-species sRNAs can be effective on diverse hosts has been unclear. Multiple species of the parasitic plant Cuscuta produce trans-species sRNAs that collectively target many host mRNAs. Confirmed target sites are nearly always in highly conserved, protein-coding regions of host mRNAs. Cuscuta trans-species sRNAs can be grouped into superfamilies that have variation in a three-nucleotide period. These variants compensate for synonymous-site variation in host mRNAs. By targeting host mRNAs at highly conserved protein-coding sites, and simultaneously expressing multiple variants to cover synonymous-site variation, Cuscuta trans-species sRNAs may be able to successfully target multiple homologous mRNAs from diverse hosts.

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Título según WOS: ID WOS:000503436500001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ELIFE
Volumen: 8
Editorial: eLIFE SCIENCES PUBL LTD
Fecha de publicación: 2019
DOI:

10.7554/eLife.49750

Notas: ISI